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  1. Datei:Interior view - Brunswick Cathedral - Braunschweig, Germany - DSC04484.JPG aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklopädie Zur Navigation springen Zur Suche springen

  2. Bishops emeritus. Robert Harris. Website. www .dioceseofsaintjohn .org. [1] [2] The Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint John, New Brunswick ( Latin: Dioecesis Sancti Ioannis Canadensis) (erected 30 September 1842, as the Diocese of Saint John in America) is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Moncton. It was renamed on 15 November 1924.

  3. Gertrude the Elder of Brunswick. Gertrude the Elder of Brunswick, also known as Gertrude of Egisheim, († 21 July [1] 1077, buried in Brunswick Cathedral) donated together with her husband Liudolf of Brunswick the collegiate church of St. Blasius in Braunschweig and founded the later so-called Welfenschatz ( Guelph Treasure ).

  4. Caroline of Brunswick (17 May 1768 – 7 August 1821) was the wife of King George IV. Her parents were Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick and Princess Augusta of Great Britain . Caroline married George on 8 April 1795, when he was the Prince of Wales. That made Caroline the Princess of Wales. When George became king on 29 January 1820 ...

  5. The Cathedral of All Souls, also referred to as All Souls Cathedral, is an Episcopal cathedral located in Asheville, North Carolina, United States of America. All Souls was built by George Washington Vanderbilt II , the grandson of railroad baron , Cornelius Vanderbilt , in 1896, to serve as the local parish church for Biltmore Village , which had been developed near his Biltmore Estate . [2]

  6. Fort Beauséjour ( French pronunciation: [fɔʁ boseʒuʁ] ), renamed Fort Cumberland in 1755, is a large, five- bastioned fort on the Isthmus of Chignecto in eastern Canada, a neck of land connecting the present-day province of New Brunswick with that of Nova Scotia. The site was strategically important in Acadia, a French colony that included ...

  7. He received the Brunonen's seat at Brunswick. After Henry's death in 1101, Gertrud again acted as regent, this time for her second son Count Otto III of Northeim. Tomb at Brunswick Cathedral Meissen. Gertrud's third husband was the Wettin scion Henry I of Eilenburg (d. 1103), Margrave of Margraviate of Meissen since 1089.